Plot

The Sun is huge. It's bigger than huge. It's so big that 1.3 million Earths would fit inside a hollowed-out
Sun. It's really far away, too - about 150 million kilometers (93 million miles) Even at that distance the Sun
affects everything on Earth. All the energy we have comes, or once came from, the Sun.

That includes energy to light a lamp, energy to kick a soccer ball, and energy in batteries that play your personal stereo. We're talking about nearly all of the energy. There's a little bit of energy that comes from nuclear reactions deep in the Earth's core. But that energy pales compared with the nuclear fusion fueling the Sun. Without
the Sun, the Earth would be a big hunk of rock with nearly nothing on it.

The Sun is made of gas. It has so much gravity that it's atoms are smashed into hot gas. In the sun, atoms
of gas are constantly crashing into each other. When they collide, they form new atoms and release energy.
Scientists call this atom smashing "nuclear fusion," and it gives off a lot of energy. A very small portion
of this energy beams straight through space to Earth, giving living things like us the power to live, grow
and eat.